Chapter 8

LITERATURE CITED

Allen, J. A.

1894. Cranial variation inNeotoma micropusdue to growth and individual differentiation. Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 6:233-246, 1 pl., August 3, 1894.

Anderson, R. M.

1932. Five new mammals from British Columbia. Ann. Rept. 1931, Nat. Mus. Canada: 99-119, 1 pl., November 24, 1932.

1942. Six additions to the list of Quebec mammals with descriptions of four new forms. Ann. Rept. Prov. Soc. Nat. Hist. for 1941:31-42, July 14, 1942.

Axelrod, D. I.

1948. Climate and evolution in western North America during Middle Pliocene time. Evol., 2:127-144, July 2, 1948.

Bailey, B.

1929. Mammals of Sherburne County, Minnesota. Jour. Mamm., 10:153-164, May 9, 1929.

Bailey, J. W.

1946. The mammals of Virginia. Williams Printing Company, Richmond, Virginia, xii + 416 pp., 96 figs. in text, December, 1946.

Bailey, V.

1923. Mammals of the District of Columbia. Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 36:103-138, May 1, 1923.

1927. A biological survey of North Dakota. N. Amer. Fauna, 49:vi + 226 pp., 1 map, 21 pls., 8 figs. in text, January 8, 1927.

1932. Mammals of New Mexico. N. Amer. Fauna, 53:1-412, 22 pls., 58 figs. in text, March 1, 1932.

1936. The mammals and life zones of Oregon. N. Amer. Fauna, 55:1-416, 1 map, 52 pls., 102 figs. in text, August 29, 1936.

Batchelder, C. F.

1899. Some unrecognized jumping mice of the genusZapus. Proc. New England Zool. Club, 1:3-7, February 8, 1899.

Blair, F. W.

1940. Home ranges and populations of the jumping mouse. Amer. Midland Nat., 23:244-250, 1 table, January, 1940.

Bole, B. P., Jr., andMoulthrop, P. N.

1942. The Ohio Recent mammal collection in the Cleveland Museum of Natural History. Scientific Publs., Cleveland Mus. Nat. Hist., 5:83-181, September 11, 1942.

Borell, A., andEllis, R.

1934. Mammals of the Ruby Mountains region of northeastern Nevada. Jour. Mamm., 15:12-44, 6 pls., 1 fig. in text, 4 tables, February 15, 1934.

Brimley, C. S.

1923. Breeding dates of small mammals at Raleigh, North Carolina. Jour. Mamm., 4:263-264, November 1, 1923.

Carl, G. C.,Guiguet, C. J., andHardy, G. A.

1952. A natural history survey of the Manning Park area British Columbia. Occ. Papers British Columbia Prov. Mus., 9:1-130, 22 figs. in text, July, 1952.

Christian, J. J.

1936. Mammals caught in post holes. Jour. Mamm., 17:416, November 16, 1936.

Cockrum, E. L., andBaker, R. H.

1950. A new jumping mouse (genusiZapus) from Kansas. Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 63:1-4, 1 fig. in text, April 26, 1950.

Coleman, R. H.

1941.Zapus hudsonius americanusin South Carolina. Jour. Mamm., 22:91, February 14, 1941.

Cope, E. D.

1871. Preliminary report on the Vertebrata discovered in the Port Kennedy Bone Cave. Proc. American Philos. Soc., 12:73-102, 20 figs., April 7, 1871.

Cory, C. B.

1912. The mammals of Illinois and Wisconsin. Field Mus. Nat. Hist. Publ. 153, zool. ser., 11:1-505, many unnumbered pls., figs. and maps in text, 1912.

Crowe, P. E.

1943. Notes on some mammals of the southern Canadian Rocky Mountains. Bull. Amer. Mus. Nat. Hist., 80:391-410, 4 pls., 1 fig. in text, February 4, 1943.

Dalquest, W. W.

1948. Mammals of Washington. Univ. Kansas Publ., Mus. Nat. Hist., 2:1-444, 140 figs. in text, April 9, 1948.

Davis, W. B.

1939. The Recent mammals of Idaho. The Caxton Printers, Caldwell, Idaho, 444 pp., 2 full page half tones, 33 figs. in text, April 5, 1939.

Dearborn, N.

1932. Foods of some predatory fur-bearing animals of Michigan. Univ. Michigan School of Forestry and Conservation, Bull. 1:1-52, 8 figs., 22 charts, 10 maps, 1932.

Dice, L. R.

1932. Mammals collected by F. M. Gaige in 1919 at Lake Cushman and vicinity, Olympic Peninsula, Washington. Murrelet, 13:47-49, May, 1932.

Durrant, S. D.

1952. Mammals of Utah, taxonomy and distribution. Univ. Kansas Publ., Mus. Nat. Hist., 6, 1-549, 91 figs. in text, 30 tables, August 10, 1952.

Eadie, R. W.1949. Hibernating meadow jumping mouse. Jour. Mamm., 30:307-308, August 17, 1949.

Edson, J. M.

1932. Hibernation of the northwest jumping mouse. Murrelet, 13:55-56, May, 1932.

Ellerman, J. R.

1940. The families and genera of living Rodents. British Mus. (Nat. Hist.), Vol. 1, pp. xxvi + 689, 189 figs., June 8, 1940.

Elliot, D. G.

1898. Lists of species of mammals principally rodents obtained by W. W. Price, Dr. S. E. Meek, G. R. Cherrie, and E. S. Thompson in the states of Iowa, Wyoming, Montana, Idaho, Nevada, and California with descriptions of new species. Field Columbian Mus. Publ. 27, zool. ser. 1:193-221, March, 1898.

1899. Catalogue of mammals from the Olympic Mountains, Washington with descriptions of new species. Field Columbian Mus. Publ. 32, zool. ser., 1:241-276, 21 pls., 13 unnumbered figs. in text, March, 1899.

Erickson, A. B.

1938. Parasites of some Minnesota rodents. Jour. Mamm., 19:252-253, May 12, 1938.

Flahaut, M. R.

1939. Unusual location of hibernating jumping mice. Murrelet, 20:17-18, 1 unnumbered pl., April 30, 1939.

Gidley, I. W., andGazin, C. L.

1938. The Pleistocene vertebrate fauna from Cumberland Cave, Maryland. U. S. Nat. Mus. Bull., 171:1-93, 50 figs., 25 tables, January 25, 1938.

Goodwin, G. G.

1924. Mammals of the Gaspé Peninsula, Quebec. Jour. Mamm., 5:246-257, 2 pls., November 15, 1924.

1935. The mammals of Connecticut. Bull. Connecticut State Geol. and Nat. Hist. Surv., 53:1-221, 33 pls., 19 figs. in text, 1935.

Grinnell, J.,Dixon, J., andLinsdale, J. M.

1930. Vertebrate natural history of a section of northern California through the Lassen Peak Region. Univ. California Publ. Zool., 35:v + 594, 181 figs. in text, October 10, 1930.

1937. Fur-bearing mammals of California…. Univ. California Press, 2 vols., xii + 375, pls. 1-7, figs. 1-138, xiv + 377-777, pls. 8-13, figs. 139-345, July 22, 1937.

Grizzell, R. A., Jr.

1949. Hibernating jumping mice in woodchuck dens. Jour. Mamm., 30:74-75, February 14, 1949.

Hall, E. R.

1930. Rodents and lagomorphs from the Later Tertiary of Fish Lake Valley, Nevada. Univ. California Publ. Bull. Dept. Geol. Sci., 19:295-312, 1 pl., 29 figs. in text, November 25, 1930.

1931. Critical comments on mammals from Utah with descriptions of new forms from Utah, Nevada and Washington. Univ. California Publ. Zool., 37:1-13, April 10, 1931.

1934. Mammals collected by T. T. and E. B. McCabe in the Bowron Lake Region of British Columbia. Univ. California Publ. Zool., 40:363-386, 1 fig. in text, November 5, 1934.

1946. Mammals of Nevada. Univ. California Press, Berkeley, xi + 710, colored frontispiece, 11 pls., 485 figs. in text, plus unnumbered silhouettes and maps, July 1, 1946.

Hall, E. R., andDavis, W. B.

1934. Notes on Arizona rodents. Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 47:51-56, 1 fig. in text, February 9, 1934.

Hamilton, W. J.

1935. Habits of jumping mice. Amer. Midland Nat., 16:187-200, 1 pl., 2 figs. in text, 1935.

Handley, C. O., Jr., andPatton, C. P.

1947. Wild mammals of Virginia. Commonwealth of Virginia, Comm. Game and Inland Fisheries, Richmond, vi + 220 pp., frontispiece, 103 figs. in text, 1947.

Harper, F.

1932. Mammals of the Athabaska and Great Slave lakes region. Jour. Mamm., 13:19-36, 3 pls., February 9, 1932.

Hausman, L. A.

1920. Structural characteristics of the hair of mammals. Amer. Nat., 54:496-523, 7 pls., November-December, 1920.

Hibbard, C. W.

1941. The Borchers Fauna a new Pleistocene interglacial fauna from Meade County, Kansas. Univ. Kansas Publ. State Geol. Surv. Kansas, Bull., 38:197-220, 2 pls., July 14, 1941.

1951. A new jumping mouse from the Upper Pliocene of Kansas. Jour. Mamm., 32:351-352, 1 fig. in text, August 23, 1951.

Hoffmeister, D. F.

1951. A taxonomic and evolutionary study of the piñon mouse,Peromyscus truei.Illinois Biol. Monog., 21:ix + 104 pp., 5 pls., 24 figs. in text, 7 tables, November 12, 1951.

Hollister, N.

1912. Mammals of the Alpine Club expedition to the Mount Robson Region. Alpine Club of Canada, Spec. No.:1-44, 13 pls. in text, 1912.

Hooper, E. T.

1944. San Francisco Bay as a factor influencing speciation in rodents. Univ. Michigan, Mus. Zool., Miscl. Publ., 59:1-89, 5 pls., 18 maps, January 12, 1944.

1952. A systematic review of the harvest mice (genusReithrodontomys) of Latin America. Miscl Publ. Mus. Zool. Univ. Michigan, 77:1-255, 9 pls., 24 figs. in text, 7 tables, 12 maps, January 16, 1952.

Howell, A. B.

1920. A study of the California jumping mice of the genus Zapus. Univ. California Publ. Zool., 21:225-238, 1 fig. in text, May 20, 1920.

Ivor, H. R.

1934. Notes on the rearing of captive young meadow jumping mice. Canadian Field-Nat., 48:8-10, January 15, 1934.

Kellogg, L.

1916. Report upon mammals and birds found in portions of Trinity, Siskiyou and Shasta counties, California. Univ. California Publ. Zool., 12:335-398, 4 pls., 1 fig., January 27, 1916.

Linsdale, J. M.

1938. Environmental responses of vertebrates in the Great Basin. Amer. Midland Nat., 19:1-206, 12 figs. in text, January, 1938.

Lyon, M. W., Jr.

1938. Mammals of Indiana. Amer. Midland Nat., 17:1-384, 125 figs. in text, 85 maps, January, 1936.

Matthew, W. D.

1915. Climate and evolution. New York Acad. Sci., 24:171-318, 33 figs., 17 tables, February 18, 1915.

Mayr, E.

1942. Systematics and the origin of species from the viewpoint of a zoologist. Columbia Univ. Press, New York, xiv + 334 pp., 29 figs., 1942.

Merriam, C. H.

1897a. Three new jumping mice (Zapus) from the Northwest. Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 11:103-104, April 26, 1897.

1897b. Mammals of Mount Mazama, Oregon. Mazama, 1:204-230, 10 pls., 1 map, October, 1897.

Miller, G. S., Jr.

1899. Preliminary list of New York mammals. Bull. New York State Mus., 6:273-390, November 18, 1899.

1911. A new jumping mouse from New Mexico. Proc. Biol. Soc. Washington, 24:253-254, December 23, 1911.

Moojen, J.

1948. Speciation in the Brazilian spiny rats (genusProechimys, family Echimyidae). Univ. Kansas Publ. Mus. Nat. Hist., 1:301-406, 140 figs. in text, 1 table, December 10, 1948.

Moore, A. W.

1928.Zapus princeps princepsin Utah. Jour. Mamm., 9:154-155, May 9, 1928.

Nicholson, A. J.

1937. A hibernating jumping mouse. Jour. Mamm., 18:103, February 11, 1937.

Pearson, O. P., andPearson, A. K.

1947. Owl predation in Pennsylvania, with notes on the small mammals of Delaware County. Jour. Mamm., 28:137-147, 1 fig., 3 tables, June 1, 1947.

Petrides, G. A.

1948. The jumping mouse in Georgia. Jour. Mamm., 29:75-76, February 13, 1948.

Preble, E. A.

1899. Revision of the jumping mice of the genusZapus. N. Amer. Fauna, 15:1-42, 1 pl., 4 figs. in text, August 8, 1899.

Preble, N. A.

1944. A swimming jumping mouse. Jour. Mamm., 25:200-201, May 26, 1944.

Quimby, D. C.

1951. The life history and ecology of the jumping mouse,Zapus hudsonius.Ecol. Monog., 21:61-95, 14 figs. in text, 7 tables, January, 1951.

Ridgway, R.

1912. Color standards and color nomenclature. Washington, D. C., privately printed, iv + 44 pp., 53 pls., 1912.

Schmidt, F. J. W.

1931. Mammals of western Clark County, Wisconsin. Jour. Mamm., 12:99-117, 1 map, May 14, 1931.

Schwartz, C. W.

1951. A new record ofZapus hudsoniusin Missouri and notes on its hibernation. Jour. Mamm., 32:227-228, May 21, 1951.

Sheldon, C.

1934. Studies of the life histories ofZapusandNapaeozapusin Nova Scotia. Jour. Mamm., 15:290-300, November 15, 1934.

1938. Vermont jumping mice of the genusZapus.Jour. Mamm., 19:324-332, 4 figs. in text, August 18, 1938.

Simpson, G. G.

1947. Holarctic mammalian faunas and continental relationships during the Cenozoic. Bull. Geol. Soc. America, 58:613-688, 6 figs. in text, 9 tables, July, 1947.

Smith, C. F., andHopkins, C. L.

1937. Notes on the barn owls of the San Francisco Bay Region. Condor, 39:189-191, September 15, 1937.

Stanford, J. S.

1931. Notes on small mammals of Utah. Jour. Mamm., 12:356-363, November 11, 1931.

Stehlin, H. G., andSchaub, S.

1951. Die Trigondontie der simplicidentaten Nager. Schweizerischen Paleont. Abhandl., Basel, 67:1-385, 620 text figuren.

Stoner, D.

1918. The rodents of Iowa. Iowa Geol. Surv., Bull., 5:1-172, 37 figs. in text, 1918.

Surface, H. A.

1906. The serpents of Pennsylvania. Monthly Bull. Div. Zool., Pennsylvania State Dept. Agric., 4:113-208, pls. 15-42, 23 figs. in text, August and September, 1906.

Svihla, A., andSvihla, R. D.

1933. Notes on the jumping mouseZapus trinotatus trinotatusRhoads. Jour. Mamm., 14:131-134, May 15, 1933.

Svihla, R. D.

1931. Mammals of the Uinta Mountain Region. Jour. Mamm., 12:256-266, 1 pl., 1 fig. in text, August 24, 1931.

Taylor, W. P.

1911. Mammals of the Alexander Nevada Expedition of 1909. Univ. California Publ. Zool., 7:205-307, 2 figs. in text, June 24, 1911.

1922. A distributional and ecological study of Mount Rainier, Washington. Ecol., 3:213-236, 4 figs. in text, July, 1922.

Test, F. H., andTest, A.

1943. Incidence of dipteran parasitosis in populations of small mammals. Jour. Mamm., 24:506-508, November 20, 1943.

Townsend, M. T.

1935. Studies on some of the small mammals of central New York. Roosevelt Wildlife Annals, 4(No. 1):1-120, 8 pls., 22 figs. in text, 35 tables, 4 maps, December, 1935.

Vergeer, T.

1948. Frog catches mouse in natural environment. Turtox News, 26:91, March, 1948.

Vinogradov, B. S.

1925. On the structure of the external genitalia in Dipodidae and Zapodidae (Rodentia) as a classificatory character. Proc. Zool. Soc. London, Part 1:577-585, 6 pls., 1925.

Whitlow, W. B., andHall, E. R.

1933. Mammals of the Pocatello Region of southeastern Idaho. Univ. California Publ. Zool., 40:235-276, 3 figs. in text, September 30, 1933.

Williams, C. S.

1938. Aids to the identification of mole and shrew hairs with general comments on hair structure and hair determination. Jour. Wildl. Mgt., 2:239-250, 1 pl., 9 figs. in text, October, 1943.

Wilson, R. W.

1936. A Pliocene rodent fauna from Smiths Valley, Nevada. Carnegie Inst. Publ., 473:15-34, 2 pls., May 21, 1936.

1937. Pliocene rodents of western North America. Carnegie Inst. Publ., 487:21-73, 2 figs. in text, July 23, 1937.

Transmitted October 9, 1953.

UNIVERSITY OF KANSAS PUBLICATIONS, MUSEUM OF NATURAL HISTORY

Institutional libraries interested in publications exchange may obtain this series by addressing the Exchange Librarian, University of Kansas Library, Lawrence, Kansas. Copies for individuals, persons working in a particular field of study, may be obtained by addressing instead the Museum of Natural History, University of Kansas, Lawrence, Kansas. There is no provision for sale or this series by the University Library which meets institutional requests, or by the Museum of Natural History which meets the requests of individuals. However, when individuals request copies from the Museum, 25 cents should be included, for each separate number that is 100 pages or more in length, for the purpose of defraying the costs of wrapping and mailing.

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[ii]

[iii]

Transcriber’s NotesAll obvious typos corrected. In Table 5 on the Swan Lake row, the Mean value for the Palatal length was corrected to 10.1 mm as there were only two values averaged (10.0 and 10.2). Abbreviation inconsistencies for mountain(s) were retained. Where a publication name contains an alternate spelling of a word, it was retained (example, Athabaska). The author Bernardo Villa-Ramirez is sometimes listed with the hyphen and sometimes without. For consistancy, they were standardized with a hyphen.Typographical CorrectionsPage(s)Correction380dention → dentition412,414Eldorado → El Dorado417Sitkine River, at Glenoria → Stikine River, at Glenora

Transcriber’s Notes

All obvious typos corrected. In Table 5 on the Swan Lake row, the Mean value for the Palatal length was corrected to 10.1 mm as there were only two values averaged (10.0 and 10.2). Abbreviation inconsistencies for mountain(s) were retained. Where a publication name contains an alternate spelling of a word, it was retained (example, Athabaska). The author Bernardo Villa-Ramirez is sometimes listed with the hyphen and sometimes without. For consistancy, they were standardized with a hyphen.

Typographical Corrections

Page(s)Correction380dention → dentition412,414Eldorado → El Dorado417Sitkine River, at Glenoria → Stikine River, at Glenora


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